-Caveat Lector-

http://www.acs.ohio-state.edu/units/research/archive/croppat1.htm

(Note: Story embargoed until 2 p.m. ET, August 10, 1999 to coincide with
presentation at the the annual meeting of the American Phytopathological
Society and Canadian Phytopathological Society.)

BIOTERRORISM MAY BE THREAT TO U.S. AGRICULTURE, EXPERT SAYS
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- As if drought and low prices weren’t enough, there’s a new,
potential concern in U.S. agriculture: bioterrorism. What would happen if
someone deliberately infected a crop with a pathogen?

It hasn’t happened in the United States yet, but experts think that it can,
and they’re now beginning to look at the risk.

Larry Madden, a professor of plant pathology at Ohio State University, said at
a conference Aug. 10 that experts need to begin identifying which pathogens
would pose the greatest threat to American agriculture if used by
bioterrorists.

“The idea is if we can know which pathogens are most likely to be used, those
are the ones that regulators can look out for,” he said.

The concern is that a disease-causing pathogen, purposely introduced into a
U.S. crop, would devastate yields or contaminate the food supply. Agriculture
and the economy as a whole would be hurt. People might get sick or go hungry.

Madden discussed some of the issues involved in identifying the
most-threatening pathogens in a symposium Aug. 10 in Montreal at the annual
meeting of the American Phytopathological Society and Canadian
Phytopathological Society.

Madden, a world expert on plant epidemiology, talked about what makes a
pathogen a risk. Among the factors: How easily it can be produced, how well it
would survive and spread in this country, the types of crops that are
susceptible, and the amount and type of damage it can cause.

“These are the types of things that matter in understanding, at least in part,
whether a pathogen in a crop is important enough to be concerned about,” said
Madden, who works at the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center in
Wooster.

Taken together, Madden said, the factors can be used to compile a “most
unwanted” list of plant pathogens. In fact, the U.S. government is working
toward just such a goal. A recent workshop in Washington D.C. looked at ways
to assess plant pathogens and their potential use in bioterrorist attacks.
Madden and other scientists participated. A formal arrangement for assessing
pathogens -- involving the Defense Intelligence Agency and the U.S. Department
of Agriculture -- is in the works, Madden said.

Soybean rust is an example of a pathogen that could blast a major crop, Madden
said. It’s not native to the United States. It spreads fast and ruins yields.

But yield loss isn’t the only threat. Some crops produce toxins when infected
by certain pathogens. Even small amounts of some of these toxins can cause
sickness and death in people and livestock.

An attack using one of these pathogens could lead to big problems, Madden
said. An entire crop might have to be screened or destroyed, even if only a
small part was infected. “That’s probably the scariest part,” he said. “A
problem might not be obvious at first.”

And because of that, a contamination -- no matter how big or small -- could
cause a loss of confidence in the safety of the food supply, Madden said. That
would harm farmers, consumers and business.

Furthermore, the nature of these toxins might open the door to hoaxes, he
said. “These (hoaxes) might be as effective as actually spreading a pathogen.
If people thought that a product was contaminated, they might not buy it even
if it wasn’t.”

So who’s the enemy? Madden said threats could come from nations, individuals
or -- most likely -- terrorist groups.

He described a scenario in which a pathogen, such as the one that causes wheat
stem rust, is genetically engineered to be especially virulent. It’s sprayed
in the air from a single small plane. The spores -- millions of them -- last a
long time and are spread by the wind. Infections produce even more spores. If
the conditions are right -- and that’s a big “if” -- an epidemic could occur.

Infection of a seed source is another possibility, and Madden said it’s a
greater risk than it used to be. Reason: A lot of the seeds planted in the
United States are now grown in other countries, and fewer companies control
this production. It’s another factor to be aware of, he said.

However, whether a bioterrorist incident ever happens -- and succeeds --
depends on many factors. “Just because a pathogen causes a serious disease in
one part of the world doesn’t mean that an introduction into the United States
is automatically a bad thing,” Madden said. “The climate may be different. The
insect vector may not be present. There are a lot of things at play that
affect the spread of a pathogen.”


#

Contact: Larry Madden, (330) 263-3833; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Written by: Kurt Knebusch, (330) 263-3776; [EMAIL PROTECTED]

NOTE: An American Phytopathological Society press release about the anti-crop
bioterrorism symposium is at:
http://www.scisoc.org/opae/media/anticrop.htm


=================================
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